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Forge Your Own St. Patrick’s Day Party!

By Lizzy Hosty

St. Patrick’s Day always holds a special place in my heart from growing up in an Irish American household – every year was celebrated with corned beef and cabbage, cake, and, of course, various types of beer. Last year, everyone’s celebrations were put on hold due to the beginning of the quarantine, and it’s pretty sad to know that yet again I will not be able to celebrate with family again this year. If you’re in that same camp, don’t worry! I’ve created a list of fun activities you can do to commemorate the day and still feel connected to your family and friends.


  •  Buddy read a great Irish book!

Reach out to one of your loved ones and ask them if you want to read a book at the same time together, and then chat on Zoom afterwards to debrief – kind of like a mini-book club! Some books to get you started are:

  • An Irish Country Welcome (or any of the Irish Country Books) by Patrick Taylor, about a close-knight Irish village anticipating the birth of the town’s beloved doctor, Barry Laverty and his wife Sue at the tail end of the 1960’s.
  • Of Irish Blood or Irish Above All by Mary Pat Kelly, of the Of Irish Blood series, which follows Nora Kelly a young woman in the beginning of the 20th century, and who inadvertently interacts with key Parisian celebrities, like Gertrude Stein (in Of Irish Blood) and important American politicians, like President-elect Franklin Roosevelt (in Irish Above All).
  • Finn Mac Cool by Morgan Llywelyn, book three in the Celtic World of Morgan Llwelyn series, and which is about the mystical person of Finn Mac Cool – part myth, parth history – who rose from lowest classes of Irish society to eventually lead the invincible army of Fianna.

2. Decorate your living space with party supplies!

Even though we can’t host traditional parties anymore, we can still make the place look festive and merry! Either brave entering your closest dollar store, or order online with quick shipping, and scoop up some faux pots of gold, four leaf clover sunglasses, green beaded necklaces, green party garlands, leprechaun decals, rainbow stickers, and don a green St. Paddy’s day top hat.

3. Invite your friends and family to watch an Irish movie online and drink your beverage of choice!

Some streaming services are now offering ways to watch movies on the site with other folks that have an account, including Disney+ (built into the website), Amazon Watch Party (still in beta), Hulu Watch Party, Teleparty (a third party extension that lets you watch multiple sites, including Netflix), and for when only one member of the group has a subscription, use Kast, formerly known as Rabbit (third party extension). Some Irish movies to suggest to your friends are The Luck of the Irish, anything with Saorise Ronan in it (Little Women, Lady Bird, Brooklyn), and The Breadwinner.

4. Cook some traditional Irish foods!

Listen, don’t let the “and cabbage” part of corned beef and cabbage throw you off – this dish is actually really delicious, and is well worth the time it takes to make it. But if you’d rather forgo the time and cabbage (I’m telling you, you’re missing out!), there’s also shepherd’s pie and Irish soda bread. And if you want to make some dessert, you can always scoop up some easy to make cookies with those four leaf clovers on them, or you can make Mint Chocolate Chip Cookies (or just buy a tub of Mint Chocolate Chip ice cream; both works).

5. Listen to some Irish pub songs!

Recently on TikTok, there has been a craze with listening to sea shanties, and while I definitely recommend listening to all those videos immediately if you haven’t, you can also listen to the jovial group songs that once permeated Irish pubs, like “If You’re Irish, Come Into the Parlour,” “The Fields of Athenry,” or “Whiskey in a Jar.”

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5 Books to Wrap Up Women’s History Month

5 Books to Wrap Up Women’s History Month

By Mary Halabani

We’re at the final stretch of Women’s History Month! March is a time to make sure we think about all the fierce females who fought, and keep fighting, for women’s rights. These tough women have given us so much, from voting rights to the ability to wear pants. So to help us celebrate strong women everywhere and their amazing accomplishments, here’s a list with some of Forge’s favorite leading ladies.


opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly
It’s the early 1900s when twenty-four-year-old progressive Nora Kelly is forced to flee her home for Paris. There she finds the centuries-old Collège des Irlandais, a good-looking scholar, an unconventional priest, and a group of Ireland’s revolutionary women who challenge Nora to honor her Irish blood and join the struggle to free Ireland.

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -92 opens in a new windowStay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered by Karen Kilgariff & Georgia Hardstark
Prioritizing self-advocating and personal safety over being “nice” or “helpful,” a conflict that so many women are faced with on a daily basis, Karen and Georgia hold nothing back in telling the stories of their biggest mistakes and deepest fears, reflecting on the depression, eating disorders, and addictions that shaped them into two of the most followed voices in the nation.

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 8Zero Sum Game by S. L. Huang
Cas Russell is not your ordinary mathematical genius. Unlike other pros, the vector calculus blazing through her head lets her smash through armed men twice her size and dodge every bullet in a gunfight, and she’ll take any job for the right price. When Cas discovers someone with powers more dangerous than her own, she must fight off the puppet master and figure out which thoughts are her own.

City of Saviors opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 77 by Rachel Howzell Hall
A fast, funny, heartbreaking, and wise homicide detective, Elouise Norton encounters her toughest case yet in City of Saviors, the fourth instalment in the critically acclaimed mystery series. Seventy-three-year-old Eugene Washington is found dead, and Lou believes that something about the way he died doesn’t add up. Lou must discover the truth while facing her own demons in order to save another soul before it’s too late.

Hard Ride by Elmer Kelton opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 21
Nothing says “Wild West” more than a group of daring women. From an infamous female outlaw who rules her gang with a gun to a judge’s daughter determined to end local mob rule, Hard Ride is riddled with powerful women whose devotions and decisions stay with you long after the book is done. Combined with glimpses into the authentic experience American West experience, this novel is filled with a passion for life that’s as vast as the Texas prairie.

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Real Life Historical Figures in Irish Above All

By Jennifer McClelland-Smith

Inspired by the life of her great aunt, Mary Pat Kelly continues the incredible saga of Nora Kelly in  opens in a new windowIrish Above All (now available in paperback). Maybe it’s the real life inspiration, or maybe it’s just a mark of great historical fiction, but this novel had us raring to read up on its wild real life inspiration.

In Irish Above All, it’s 1923 and Nora Kelly has returned to the United States after ten years abroad in Paris, where she established herself as a photographer (quite the feat for a woman in 1923!). Her life only gets more exciting as she witnesses history and encounters some of the twentieth century’s most notable figures. Here’s a glimpse at the real life characters that color Irish Above All, plus a sneak peek at how they and Nora cross paths!

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Franklin Delano Roosevelt, distant cousin to former president Theodore Roosevelt

Franklin D. Roosevelt – Nora Kelly is a witness to history as she photographs the attempted assassination of FDR. Roosevelt was less than a month away from his inauguration when he gave a fateful impromptu speech in Miami, Florida; fueled by his “hate for all rulers,” Giuseppe Zangara shot at and missed the newly elected president, mortally wounding Chicago mayor Anton Cermak instead.

Joseph “Joe” Kennedy – While accompanying Roosevelt on his trip to Florida, Nora finds herself in the company of Joseph Kennedy. Not just a leader in the Irish-American community and the Democratic party in the early twentieth century, he was the patriarch of a storied political dynasty that continues to this day. Kennedy would work closely with FDR as the first head of both the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Maritime Commission, as well as the US Ambassador to the UK.
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Joe Kennedy, father of the political dynasty
Ed Kelly – Nora’s cousin Ed Kelly succeeded Anton Cermak as mayor of Chicago after his untimely death. He remained in office from 1933 to 1947 and oversaw the 1933 World’s Fair and the completion of Soldier Field.
General Italo Balbo – Nora Kelly’s camera captured figures on the right side of history—and the wrong side as well. General Italo Balbo was a top general and “heir apparent” to Benito Mussolini. The National Fascist Party leader still has a presence in Chicago today: Mussolini gifted the city with a monument after Balbo’s visit to the 1933 World’s Fair. There is currently an effort to remove the monument and rename Balbo Drive, which runs through downtown Chicago.
Al Capone – Since he was at her cousin Ed Kelly’s side during his rise through Chicago’s political machine, it was inevitable that legendary gangster Al Capone would become a presence in Nora Kelly’s story. Capone was also a major factor both times Big Bill Thompson was elected mayor of Chicago (after Thompson hinted that he’d reopen illegal saloons).
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Al Capone, infamous American gangster

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8 Books to Read for Galentine’s Day

By Alison Bunis

Happy Galentine’s Day! What’s Galentine’s Day, you ask? Essentially, for those of you not in the know, what started as a made-up holiday on the tv-show Parks and Recreation has become a real holiday. The day before Valentine’s Day, the most couple-y of holidays, gal pals everywhere put aside their partners and say to each other, “I appreciate your friendship and I love you.” How you celebrate is up to you, of course. Leslie Knope of Parks and Rec obviously goes for breakfast food, because that’s her love language. But for us here at Forge, our love language is obviously books. So to celebrate Galentine’s Day this year, we’ve put together a list of books celebrating women!

These books are by women or about women. Some of these women kick ass. Some of these women bake magic pies. Some of them tell you about their parents’ divorce and how not to join a cult, and some of them write about ISIS occupations. It’s a wide range, because there’s no predetermined way to be a woman, or to be a gal-pal. So grab your BFF, grab a couple of books, and get reading. Ladies celebrating ladies by reading about awesome ladies. What could be more Galentine’s Day than that??


For the Non-fiction Gal

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 12 opens in a new windowStay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered by Karen Kilgariff & Georgia Hardstark
Pick up this book if you’re into Karen & Georgia’s podcast, My Favorite Murder! But even if you’re not a podcast person, don’t worry, this book is an excellent read for anyone looking for an honest, open, hilarious memoir about the struggles of dealing with mental health issues, addiction, and being a True Crime fan.

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 11 opens in a new windowFather of Lions by Louise Callaghan
This one is a touching story of humanity in the midst of war, told by award-winning journalist Louise Callaghan. Callaghan is one of the youngest Middle East Correspondents ever hired by the Sunday Times (UK), and she has had pieces published in The Sunday Times Magazine, Vogue, and the Times Literary Supplement. Talk about an impressive lady. Father of Lions is a must-read if you’re interested in a story that will make you view war and conflict in a new light, or if you want a good book about brave animals.

To Get Your Pulse Racing

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 19 opens in a new windowThe Retreat by Sherri Smith
We’ve all got that one friend who’s way too into the latest wellness craze. Maybe we are that friend, and no one’s told us yet. Doesn’t matter, this is just the book to break the spell: four friends go for a weekend getaway at a wellness retreat. By the end, only one of them is left standing…

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -58 opens in a new windowTrust Me by Hank Phillippi Ryan
Hank Phillippi Ryan is an award-winning investigative journalist, so when she sits down to write a book about a journalist looking for the truth in an unbearably brutal story, you can bet she delivers. Trust Me is full of all the psychological suspense and manipulation that any thriller reader could ever desire.

A Hint of Magic

Place holder  of - 98 opens in a new windowMidnight at the Blackbird Cafe by Heather Webber
For your friend who believes in magic, for your friend who believes in love, for your friend who loves to bake, for your friend from a small town, for your friend with a close family, for your friend with serious family issues: Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe checks all the boxes. But have baked goods on hand: you’ll definitely want a snack while reading.

opens in a new window opens in a new windowRemembrance by Rita Woods
Do you want to spark a discussion with your friends? Want to dive into the deeper issues surrounding the Haitian Revolution and the Underground Railroad? Or do you just want to sink into an enthralling read about four women, connected across different times and places, struggling to make their way in a world that doesn’t have a place for them? (Hint: If you liked The Underground Railroad or The Orphan Train, this is definitely the book for you.)

Historically Accurate Friendships

opens in a new window opens in a new windowAsk Me No Questions by Shelley Noble
 Okay, this one’s for the gal pal groups who watched Downton Abbey together. The movie helped, sure, but it was just one movie. So if you’re suffering from Downton Abbey withdrawal, Shelley Noble is here to help you out with her delightful mystery set in Gilded Age Manhattan, where horse racing, romance, murder, and scandals abound. Someone simply must do something. And our plucky heroine Lady Dunbridge is happy to oblige.

opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly
This vivid, compelling epic is a great read for anyone interested in Irish heritage or family history, because author Mary Pat Kelly based the story on her own great-aunt’s life. Following heroine Nora Kelly as she travels through Europe in 1903, readers will meet all kinds of exciting real-life characters such as Gertrude Stein, William Butler Yeats, and James Joyce!

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Excerpt: Irish Above All by Mary Pat Kelly

opens in a new windowamazons opens in a new windowbns opens in a new windowbooksamillions opens in a new windowibooks2 82 opens in a new windowindiebounds

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 88After ten years in Paris, where she learned photography and became part of the movement that invented modern art, Chicago-born, Irish-American Nora Kelly is at last returning home. Her skill as a photographer will help her cousin Ed Kelly in his rise to Mayor of Chicago. But when she captures the moment an assassin’s bullet narrowly misses President-elect Franklin Roosevelt and strikes Anton Cermak in February 1933, she enters a world of international intrigue and danger.

Now, she must balance family obligations against her encounters with larger-than-life historical characters, such as Joseph Kennedy, Big Bill Thompson, Al Capone, Mussolini, and the circle of women who surround F.D.R. Nora moves through the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression, and World War II, but it’s her unexpected trip to Ireland that transforms her life.

opens in a new windowIrish Above All by Mary Pat Kelly will be available on February 5th. Please enjoy this excerpt.

1

“Come on, come on.” After rushing from New York to Chicago in twenty hours thirty-four minutes, a record the conductor told me, the 20th Century Limited seemed to be panting its way along the last yards of track into LaSalle Street Station. I was desperate to get off the train. I’d left Paris two weeks ago in response to Rose’s telegram, “Mame dying.” Mame McCabe Kelly—Rose’s sister, my brother Michael’s wife, and my pal since we were girls. She was still alive, but weak, Rose had told me on the phone last night when I called from New York as soon as the Normandie had docked.

Mame’s doctor had told Rose there’d been some complications after “the operation for female problems.” He’d been vague, Rose said. A hysterectomy, probably an infection. Mame was not recovering. The prognosis was not good.

“What can you expect,” I’d said to Rose. “Mame had five children in seven years and she was thirty-one years old when she gave birth to the first. I mean, dear God. . . .”

“Nonie, please,” Rose had said. “She and Michael wanted a family and . . .” Rose had stopped. She and her husband John had tried so hard for a baby. Three miscarriages before I’d left and probably more since.

“Your sister Henrietta won’t let me see Mame,” Rose had said.

“I’ll handle Henrietta,” I’d said.

“I just think if the three of us were together again it might give Mame strength,” Rose said.

Finally the train stopped. The doors opened. I was down the stairs and onto the platform and there was my cousin Ed waiting, wearing a bowler hat and spats. Always dapper was Ed.

“Welcome home, Nonie,” he said. After ten years of being Nora, I was Nonie again. My nickname in the family. Ed was bringing me back into the fold.

He tipped his hat. Not much gray in his red hair. Three years older than me, so forty-seven. No bulge of fat under the double-breasted jacket of his pinstripe suit. Does he still run along the lake in the morning? He’d picked up the habit when he was boxing champion of the Brighton Park Athletic Association. His start in politics. I opened my arms but he stepped back. No hug. Not in public with a uniformed railway official next to him.

“Any word?” I said.

“No change as far as I know. We’ll pick up Rose and John Larney and go straight out to Argo.” Ed’s mother and Rose’s mother-in-law, Kate Larney, were sisters. One more strand in the web that bound us all together.

“Let’s go,” Ed said to the official who led us off the platform.

A Red Cap followed behind with my Gladstone bag. “No other luggage?” Ed asked me as we walked through the station.

“No,” I said, “just this and my camera bag.” I planned to return to Paris as soon as . . .

Ed took the bag from me and gave the Red Cap a dollar. “Thank you very much,” the Negro man said.

“You a South Sider?” Ed asked.

“Yes, sir,” he said. “Bronzeville.”

Ed nodded. We walked toward the LaSalle Street exit.

“He probably voted for Thompson. The colored people in Chicago will support any Republican running because it’s the party of Lincoln. But we finally beat Big Bill Thompson. We’ve elected a good man, Nonie. Our first Irish Catholic mayor. Bill Dever. Decent Dever.”

“Well, that’s good,” I said.

We were out on Canal Street now. “More people and cars in the streets than I remember, Ed.”

“Chicago is growing,” Ed said. “The population has doubled since you left. The city limits are expanding. That’s why we have to get a respectable government. Change our reputation.”

“I know, Ed. Even in Paris when I said I was from Chicago someone would do this . . .” I made a tommy gun with my hands and pointed. “Ack, ack, ack.” Ed shook his head. “Thompson took millions from Capone. Gave him the run of the city. Dever has already forced the Outfit’s headquarters out of Chicago into Cicero. It’s a start. With Dever in office, we’re moving ahead,” he said.

Ed walked up to a long expensive-looking black automobile. Took keys from his pocket and unlocked the door.

“Nice,” I said to him. Ed had been doing alright for himself when I’d left— a good city job as an engineer—but this was a rich man’s car. Not the time to ask questions, but I wondered.

“I started buying Packards because Mary liked to take drives out to the country on Sundays,” Ed said.

Mary. Ed’s wife. Poor girl. Only twenty-five when she died in the 1918 flu epidemic. Pregnant. Terrible that women who were expecting were the most susceptible. Both she and the little one gone.

“I’m so sorry about Mary, Ed,” I said. “I should have mentioned her right away.”

“Nothing to say really. Everyone tells me time will help. But it’s been five years and I miss her every day.”

“So sad,” I said.

“I wonder would the baby have been a girl,” Ed said. “Mary wanted a daughter and Ed Junior was looking forward to a little sister.”

I reached out and squeezed his forearm. “Oh, Ed,” I said.

“She’s buried in Calvary. A Celtic cross in Connemara marble. She’d be pleased.”

“I want to visit her grave,” I said. Some comfort to know the one you loved was tucked into a lovely grave, I thought.

Ed held the passenger door open for me. I got in. He put the bag in the back seat. Sat in the driver’s seat. I pulled the skirt of my suit down over my knees.

“That’s pretty short, Nonie,” he said. “And is that a man’s jacket you’re wearing?”

“It’s the fashion, Ed,” I said. “Haven’t Chicago women turned up their hems?”

“Not ones your age,” he said.

“In Paris, forty-four is not old,” I said.

“But you’re not in Paris now,” he said.

I’d spent ten years as Mademoiselle Photographie, a woman with a profession who earned her own living and was friendly with artists and writers. I’d been part of a group of Irish rebels clustered around the Collège des Irlandais near the Pantheon.

Honora Bridget Kelly was my baptismal name. I’d been called after my grandmother, Honora Keeley Kelly, but I preferred the more modern Nora. Granny’s name connected her to Ireland and a history I’d only recently discovered. Now I would be Nora, Nonie in the family, on my way to my brother’s house to look after his sick wife. Doing my duty. I was a Kelly of Chicago. A meat-and-potatoes town where grown men did not paint strange pictures or write obscure books and women lived for their husbands and children, of which I had neither. I had to wonder would the Biblical father have slaugh- tered a calf for a prodigal daughter? Probably would have told her to get into the kitchen and start the dinner.

Ed turned west on Jackson Boulevard. Though the Kellys and Larneys were South Siders, he told me Rose and John had broken with tradition and were living in a bungalow on the West Side.

“It’s closer to police headquarters, at Twenty-Sixth and California,” Ed said. “John’s working out of that station now.” Excusing the defection.

I’ll see Rose in a few minutes, I thought. Rose, Mame, and I. My brother Michael called us “The Trio.” Three young women marking the century’s turn with a vow to live our own lives and support each other. We would not marry at sixteen as our mothers had. We would have jobs that used our intelligence and skills. We would march and demonstrate until women could vote. Until our rights were recognized.

And we had won. The three of us had started at Montgomery Ward’s as telephone operators, taking orders from all over the country. We were required to sound like proper American ladies. Another trap. But we’d burst through the restraints that the anti-Irish Miss Allen had put on us and moved up. Mame became the private secretary of the vice president of Montgomery Ward, mastering that new machine, the typewriter. Rose and I set up our own Ladies Fashion Department. Twenty-five-year-old successes. The new women. Confident and unafraid and then, well . . . Rose fell in love with John Larney, married him. Not proper for a married woman to continue working. Not when she wants a family. And Mame was secretly in love with my brother Michael, the forty-five-year-old bachelor who didn’t dare declare his love for her openly for fear of our sister Henrietta. Henrietta, nearly seven years older than I am . . . she was just fifteen when she married a cousin of ours called Bill Kelly and moved with him sixty miles south of the city to a small Illinois farm town. I remembered visiting her in the little house surrounded by fields. Bill worked long hours farming and in a local food processing factory. Henrietta had three little ones in six years and then suddenly she and the children were back home with us. Bill Kelly dead in an accident at the factory and Henrietta a widow at twenty-two. Granny Honora had tried to explain to me that Henrietta was cranky all the time because she was mourning her husband. But I don’t think Henrietta gave Bill Kelly much thought. She’d only known him such a little time.

No, Henrietta was mad because she didn’t have her own house. Never occurred to her to get a job and work for the money to go out on her own. Henrietta had been a maid in one of the Prairie Avenue mansions when she was fourteen.

“I’m never taking orders from some prune-faced woman again. I married Bill Kelly so the only floors I’d have to scrub were my own,” she’d told me when, after a year of living with us, I repeated what my friend’s mother, Mary Sweeney, had said, that Henrietta could get a good job as a housekeeper.

We pulled up in front of John and Rose’s bungalow. Rose came running out. I hurried up the steps to meet her. We stood on the porch hugging, and I started crying. I’d missed her, missed Chicago, missed myself, really, the Nora that should have been. I loved my life in Paris and would be back there soon, but . . .

John walked out. “Good to see you, Nora. Hello, Ed.”

“And Mame, Rose?” I asked.

“Very sick, Nonie. That’s what Stella Lambert, their neighbor in Argo, says.

She calls me. I haven’t seen Mame in a month. Your sister Henrietta is like a woman possessed. She won’t let me in when I go there. Poor Michael is in such a fog, spends hours just sitting next to Mame’s bed. The kids are terrified. And Henrietta’s, well, she’s hard on the little ones.”

“Don’t tell me,” I said. “Spare the rod, spoil the child. Her favorite saying. I’m home now, Rose, and I’m well able for Henrietta.”

An hour later we arrived at Michael and Mame’s big corner house, surrounded by trees and grass. A very small town and very pleasant-looking Summit was, even if the huge corn starch factory made everyone call Summit “Argo.”

Henrietta’s dream come true.

Toots, her youngest son, opened the door. In his thirties now, a bit spindly with a belly that slopped over his belt, but grinning with the same smile he’d turned on all of us when he was a child, making us laugh with his dancing and singing (“A regular George M.!” Mam had said). But it wasn’t so funny when they expelled him from St. Bridget’s school. Hard place to get kicked out of, if you were a Kelly.

We’d all been baptized there. Granny Honora had worked in the parish office in the year dot, and Michael, my brother, always had put wads of bills into the collection basket. But Toots had stolen the other kids’ pennies and lied to beat the band. Deliberate badness too. He was only five when I’d seen him take Granny Honora’s clay pipe and drop it with great concentration on the slate floor in front of the hearth. Crying, of course, and saying it was an accident. Then he’d begged a dime from Michael to go buy another pipe for Granny, though pipes were a nickel. He kept the change. A chancer.

“My little fatherless boy,” Henrietta would croon to him, and I’d think, Ah, well.

But then I was fatherless myself, and hadn’t my da and aunt and uncles lost their father young and suffered in Ireland as no children should? Yet they were decent. Each and every one of them. I mean, dead fathers were two for a penny in Bridgeport.

“I’m afraid Toots has a wee quirk, Henrietta. You’re not helping the boy by indulging him,” Mam had said to her when he was ten and had been expelled from a Bridgeport public school.

But Henrietta had let him lay in bed until noon and then he’d run errands for her, often coming home with half the groceries and some story about giving them away to a woman with two children who needed food. Mam, who had a horror of people going hungry, would only nod, just in case he wasn’t giving out his usual line of rubbish and someone had really been in need. I talked to Michael once, but he’d only shrugged. Peace at any price, our Michael.

In those days, Michael was hardly home anyway, going off on jobs or out to boxing matches or Democratic politics. A big man for banquets, Michael was, master of ceremonies at the Knights of Columbus and a dozen others. Of course, in those years, he was secretly courting Mame and I had been besotted with Tim McShane, so no one had taken a hand with Toots. Henrietta, so stern with her other children, made a fool of herself over her baby. Not that I’m one to talk about blind love.

“So, the prodigal returns,” Toots said.

“Show some respect for your aunt,” Ed said to him.

“Oh, I have great respect for anyone who gets out of this town,” he said. And then there was Henrietta. The same gray hair pulled back into a bun, and could that be the same purple housedress she wore ten years ago? “You,” she said to me. And, “You,” turning to Rose and John.

“You are not needed here.”

Ed spoke up. “Now, Henrietta, isn’t it grand to have Nonie home? Your own sister.”

“No sister of mine. She gave up that right,” she said.

“And what about my sister?” Rose said. “I’m here to see Mame.” “Which she will do, Henrietta,”

Ed said. “And no scenes.”

“Please, Henrietta,” I began.

But she stuck her finger in my face. “You brought evil into this family! Your hoodlum boyfriend attacked me!” Screaming the words.

“Stop it, Henrietta,” I said. “For God’s sake, do you want the children to hear?”

But it was too late. Two young girls stood in the parlor doorway, one holding a baby in her arms. Next to them, a young boy held the hand of a small girl—all looking up at us. Michael and Mame’s children—ten, eight, six, four, and two years old.

The boy and littlest girl rushed into Rose’s arms, and the older two moved close. Rose took the baby.

“Aunt Rose, I’m sorry,” the oldest girl said.

Rose embraced them. “Sorry? For what?”

It was the little fellow spoke up. “Aunt Henrietta said we were so bad that

Aunt Rose and Uncle John wouldn’t visit us anymore.” He walked over to John. “She said you would put me in jail and that I may even die in the electric chair.”

John picked him up. “Your aunt Henrietta says some very foolish things, Mike. You’re a good sturdy lad and a comfort to your mother. Why would I put you in jail?”

Henrietta screamed, “I never said any such thing!”

“She did,” said the oldest girl.

Then Rose said to her, “Come on, Rosemary. And Ann, bring Frances.

We’ll go back in the kitchen. John, bring Mike and Marguerite. You’ll finish your breakfast and then meet your aunt Nonie. She’s come all the way from Paris to see you.”

That’s when Mame called down from her bedroom, “Who’s there?” Such a weak voice.

“Go up to her, Nonie,” Rose said to me.

I ran up the stairs. Wood-carved banisters with stained glass windows set along the wall so the sun threw patterns onto the dark green carpet. A lovely house. All Henrietta had ever wanted, but it wasn’t hers. Demented with jealousy. Dear God, were we better off when we were all poor together?

“Mame, it’s me. It’s Nora,” I said. Very dark in the room, only a little lamp, like a vigil light.

“Nonie! Nonie! Home at last!” Mame said.

“And Rose is here too,” I said.

“Rose? But Henrietta said Rose was too sick to come,” Mame said. “Rose is fine and she’s here, and John too. And Ed.”

“But Henrietta . . .” Mame half sat up.

“Forget about Henrietta, Mame.”

“But she’s been very good, coming in to help with the children. She said no housekeeper would take on five children and a woman as sick as I am. And it wasn’t fair to expect Rose to . . .”

I settled her back on her pillows. “For God’s sake, Mame, don’t you know better than to listen to Henrietta? Rose is here, and I’m here. The Trio together and you’re going to be fine, Mame, and up with those gorgeous kids of yours soon.”

She smiled. “They are gorgeous. The oldest, Rosemary, named for Rose and my mother, and then Ann for your sister—she was great with the children when they were little, but she’s her own life now. Henrietta tells me a policewoman must be on call. And our son was born on Christmas Eve, 1916. We were going to give him Victor as a middle name, a kind of prayer that the war would end. But then Michael said that Michael Joseph Kelly was your grandfather, who died in Ireland, and his own name which he wanted his son to carry on. Marguerite was named for you, Nonie.”

“Me?”

“So many Margarets and Maggies and Peggys and Marguerite is French, and with you in Paris . . .”

“Thank you, Mame.”

“And little Frances is in honor of St. Francis Assisi. I was praying to him because the doctor thought we wouldn’t have any more children. But look at her. Beautiful. And I was just fine until I started bleeding and . . .”

Then Rose was there. “Mame,” she said, and walked over to the bed and pulled the spread straight. “You could use another pillow.”

“Oh, Rose,” Mame said. Rose leaned over and the two of them held on to each other until Mame said, “You’re very good to come, but I didn’t want you to be upset.”

“Upset? Me? Not a bother on me and you’re going to get well, Mame.” She walked over and pulled open the curtains. “Let some sun in here. Henrietta’s been a help but I think it’s time for me to lend a hand. I’ll stay in the room on the third floor. Isn’t it grand to have Nonie home and looking so glamorous? Might even get me to bob my hair. Mame did.”

And I saw that, yes, though her hair was matted, Mame did indeed have a shingle.

“And your dress, Nonie. Puts me in mind of our uniforms at St. Xav’s,” said Mame.

“The designer was raised in a convent school, an orphan, or kind of an orphan.” I started to tell them about how I had become a friend of Coco Chanel and all about Paris, until I noticed that Mame was closing her eyes. I looked at Rose.

She waved me away and I left the two McCabe girls together. I’d come home ready to make peace with Henrietta. But now . . . how could she keep these sisters apart?

I could hear Henrietta’s high-pitched yowling and Ed’s low tones as I walked by the closed parlor door. Leave them to it, I thought, and found the kitchen where the children huddled together around a table. A young colored woman stirred a large pot at the modern stove. Electric.

“Hello,” I said. “I’m Nora Kelly. Their aunt Nonie.”

“About time,” she said. “I’d walk out of here if Mrs. Michael wasn’t such a kind woman. My name’s Jesse Howard.”

So Henrietta had help with the house and the cooking and was still complaining. Jesse ladled what looked like oatmeal into a bowl and sat down at the table.

“Me and Rosemary and Ann will finish eating, then clean up. You take the three little ones out until the war to end all wars is finished in the parlor,” Jesse said.

“But maybe I should—”

“You’re Nonie? Well, she’s been shouting your name. Better hightail it.” I brought the three youngest—Mike, Marguerite, and Frances—out into the backyard. So flat, Chicago and Summit/Argo had no tall buildings to hold back the prairie. It came lapping at our ankles despite the green slatted fence Michael and Mame built to enclose a bit of the wild. They’d stuck in peony bushes and hollyhocks and called it a garden. But weeds and tall grass were scattered throughout the yard. I thought of the Jardins Luxembourg and Parc Monceau, with their obedient flowers and shrubs.

I carried Frances and followed Mike, who led Marguerite and me to the far corner of the yard and a gap in the fence. Just beyond, in the open space bricks were stacked one on another in a square about as high was my waist.

“Our fort.”

“With Bobby,” Marguerite said. “His friend. They fight Indians.”

“They do? Well, did you know that the Kelly family ate their first Christmas dinner in America at the home of an Indian family?”

They shook their heads no.

“Well,” I said, balancing on one surprisingly sturdy wall of the fort, holding Frances while Marguerite and Michael sat in the dirt. “Fadó,” I started. “What?” Michael said.

“Once upon a time,” I said, but I’d hardly begun when a very elegant woman holding the hand of a young boy came walking toward us. “Bobby!” Mike said and ran toward them.

“I’m Stella Lambert,” the woman said. “I see the children are getting dirty.”

My brother Michael arrived just after noon. I saw him from the window as he slowly got out of his car then took one look at Ed’s Packard and started running up the walk, taking the porch steps two at a time.

Henrietta got to the door first but Ed, Rose, John, the children, and I were right behind her.

“Ed, is it Mame? Is she . . . ?” He was halfway up the staircase to the bedroom before Ed’s voice stopped him.

“She’s fine, Michael. She’s sleeping.”

Michael looked down at us gathered below him. “Then why are you all here? Rose, John and . . .” He saw me.

“It’s me, Michael,” I said. “It’s Nonie.”

“Nonie?” He walked slowly down to me, squinting through his black- rimmed glasses. “Nonie, you’re here.”

“I am that, Michael. Just off the boat and the train. I arrived this morning.”

“Oh she’s back alright.” Henrietta stood with her arms folded, Toots next to her.

I paid her no mind, stepped right up to Michael and hugged him hard. “The prodigal has returned,” I said.

Now Mike, Ann, and Rosemary swarmed around Michael, holding his legs.

“Everybody came, Dad,” Mike said.

Michael put his hand on his son’s head. “You want a drink, Ed? John? Tea or something, Rose? Nonie?”

He turned to Henrietta, but Rosemary spoke up. “I’ll tell Jesse to bring some food, Daddy. Come on, Ann.”

Henrietta didn’t move. She’s feathered herself quite a nest, I thought, and what was she doing? Only scaring the kids half to death, practically telling them, “If you’re not good, your mother will die.” Ridiculous. And yet she’d said the same to me when Mam passed away, telling me, “She cried about your life, Nonie. You helped put her in an early grave. I only thank God she was dead before she found out about your final degradation.”

And somewhere inside me, I’d believed her. If I’d married at nineteen, Mam would be alive today. Nonsense, but Henrietta could be so convincing. My big sister who brought home those lovely babies for me to play with. And Agnella, what better little sister than Agnella, holding tight to my hand and smiling up at me as we walked the streets of Bridgeport. (“An aunt’s better than a sister,” she told me once, and then whispered, “and nicer than a mama.”) Agnella had entered the convent . . . and it would break her heart to know her mother was une connasse, as the French would say.

Jesse came in with the girls, carrying sandwiches and a big pot of tea, and set them on the parlor table. “I thought you’d have to stop talking long enough to eat. There’s ham and roast beef,” she said. And then to Henrietta, “I know you said to save this meat for you and Mr. Toot’s lunch, Mrs. Kelly, but . . .” She stopped.

“Fine, fine, Jesse,” Henrietta said.

Ann put a pile of plates and napkins next to the tray, and as we helped ourselves, I remembered all the parties at the flat on Hillock—aunts and uncles and cousins laughing. Mam, Granny Honora, dishing out plate after plate of colcannon, potatoes mashed with onions and cabbage running with butter, thick slices of beef and ham straight from the meatpacking houses.

Even after the boys moved on to better jobs, there was always someone we knew working in the stockyards to bring home the best cuts of meat. But Mam and Jim dying so close together changed everything, took the heart out of our house. Family parties were held at Uncle Steve’s—Ed’s father’s place—and we were the guests.

Did the other Kellys draw away from our family just a wee bit? Da dead so young and then Mam and Jim; Granny Honora, Aunt Máire and Uncle Patrick gone too, but they were long-lived. Was our family the hard luck Kellys? A widow, two spinsters, two bachelors. One brother had married and moved away. I had my work and Tim McShane. While Michael, Ann, Mart, and I had neither chick nor child, the other cousins had loads of children. Then the great burst of joy of Michael and Mame’s wedding and that wonderful party, until Tim McShane ruined the night and I . . . I closed my eyes and leaned against the back of the armchair.

Then suddenly, Rose was shaking me.

“I must’ve fallen asleep.”

“You must be exhausted,” she said.

I nodded. “Hard to sleep on the train.”

“Take a nap in our room, Aunt Nonie,” Ann said.

But Ed was standing up. “My mother has a room waiting for Nonie at our place,” he said. Aunt Nelly had been looking after Ed and his young son since Mary had died.

Rose walked over to John.

“Don’t leave, Aunt Rose. Don’t leave!” Mike said and the girls joined in, holding on to Rose’s hands, her dress, any part of her they could clutch.

“Stop that,” Henrietta said. “You’ll wake your mother. Quiet. No wonder she’s sick, with such ruffians running around this house.”

“That’s enough, Henrietta,” Michael said.

“I’m staying,” Rose said. “If that’s alright, Michael?”

“It’s not alright,” Henrietta broke in. “I’m not staying under the same roof as you, Rose McCabe. All of you scheming against me.”

And Michael woke up. Like that. In the snap of a finger. He stood up.

“Then go, Henrietta. You and Toots. Go back to Hillock with Mart and Ann. Now. Today.”

Then ructions!

Stella Lambert put down her mug of tea and got her Bobby, Mike, and the girls moving and out the door. “I’ll give them dinner,” she said.

We all just stared at Henrietta as she roared and raged until finally Toots took her by the arm. “Come on, Mother. We won’t stay where we’re not wanted.”

Never saw Michael so strong-faced and determined. “Get ready and I’ll drive you,” he said. Then to Rose, “You’ll explain to Mame? Tell her I’ll be back.”

“I’m sorry we dragged you home for this, Nonie,” John said as I got into Ed’s car. “But Rose said she just couldn’t face Henrietta alone and didn’t want to bring Ed into it on her own. Rose is not afraid of anybody, but Henrietta seems to have the kibosh on her.”

“On me too,” I said, “and believe me, the battle’s not over. Henrietta’s lost round one but she’ll come out fighting. I’m glad you’ll be staying here with Rose,” I said.

________

“Are you too tired for a quick stop on the way to my house, Nonie?” Ed asked me, as we turned off Archer Avenue onto a highway that was new to me. A very grand stretch of road going along the lake.

“I’m fine, Ed. What’s this avenue?”

“South Shore Drive,” Ed said.

“Your dream come true.”

Ed had been talking about building just such a highway since he was fourteen. “This is only the beginning,” he said to me. “Close your eyes, Nonie,” he said.

In a few minutes he stopped the car. “Look up,” he said. There above us on a rise, twenty or thirty white columns marched against the sky.

“Dear God,” I said. “It looks like a Roman temple.”

“Not Roman,” Ed said. “Greek. Those are Doric columns.”

“So tall,” I said.

“Each one’s a hundred and fifty feet high,” Ed said. “That’s fifteen stories.

And there’s another colonnade just like it on the east entrance and this is just the façade. There’s ten acres down below that are being made into the best stadium in the country. The field will be a half a mile long with three tracks going around. There’ll be seating for one hundred thousand.

We’ve already had inquiries from people who want to hold events here. Things like championship fights. The cardinal called me about having the Eucharistic Congress here. It’s going to be a gathering place for the entire city of Chicago. It’s not coming cheap. Probably going to cost ten million dollars, but there’s fifteen thousand jobs in the project and can you imagine the money that’s going to come into the city from all the events. It’ll be like the Columbian Exposition all over again.”

He pointed toward Lake Michigan. “I want to create an island and build museums and parks.”

“Wonderful, Ed.”

“With Thompson gone anything is possible. Private money is available and tourists are coming back to the city.”

There was honking behind us. A line of trucks trying to get to the construction site. Ed pulled out of their way back onto the drive. I tried to listen as we drove south but my eyes got heavy. I woke to find we were parked in front of a mansion.

“Jesus, Mary, and Joseph! Where are we?” I asked.

“Mary and I bought this house right before she got sick. We wanted room for our children.”

“But it must have cost a fortune,” I said. “How . . .”

“I’ve worked hard,” Ed said, “and been lucky in my investments. Got some good stock tips.”

“But,” I began. Ed was getting out of the car. He came around, opened my door. Subject closed.

Yes, I thought, as we walked into the three-story redbrick house, set back from Ellis in the nicest part of Hyde Park. There should be loads of kids running in and out of the place, bringing their friends. Instead I found room after room sparsely furnished—no carpets, no curtains—and Aunt Nelly, Ed’s mother, in the kitchen serving liver and dumplings to a six-year-old boy. Ed’s son . . . Ed Junior.

She hugged me, this woman who’d known them all—Granny Honora, Aunt Máire, Uncle Patrick, my da and mam, all of home in her embrace, and that’s what she said to me.

“Welcome home, Nonie.”

“I’m too tired to eat,” I told her, and she took me upstairs and gave me one of her own nightgowns. A soft white tent of cotton. Comforting. “Thank you, Aunt Nelly.”

“Ed will bring your bag in from the car. You can unpack tomorrow.” No questions. No chat. But then Aunt Nelly’s half German. Nice that, sometimes.

I turned on my side, feather pillows under my head. Closed my eyes and then, as I did every night, I visited that part of my mind where Peter Keeley waited. The man I’d fallen in love with in Paris. Sometimes we were in the library of the Irish College, near the Pantheon, and he was translating the skirl of letters in an old Irish manuscript. So intense, as he opened my heritage to me. Or we were sharing our bed in my room overlooking the Place des Vosges. Tonight I found him in Connemara, on the shores of Lough Inagh, coming toward me. But then. Stop. Stay there. I couldn’t let my mind rush ahead to that freezing night just before Christmas when Cyril Peterson arrived with news from Ireland. The worst. Peter was dead. Killed in the civil war that had broken out just as Ireland had finally gotten Britain to withdraw. Former comrades shooting each other. No. Go back, go back. Imagine Peter smiling. Run to him.

I fell asleep with Aunt Nelly’s nightgown wrapping me. Chicago. Welcome home.

Copyright © 2019

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New Releases: 2/2/16

Here’s what went on sale today!

opens in a new windowPirate’s Prophecy by Chris A. Jackson

opens in a new windowPathfinder Tales: Pirate's Prophecy by Chris A. Jackson Paizo Publishing is the award-winning publisher of fantasy role playing games, accessories, and board games. Pathfinder Tales: Pirate’s Prophecy is the continuation of their popular novel series.

Captain Torius Vin and the crew of the Stargazer have given up the pirate life, instead becoming abolitionist privateers bent on capturing slave ships and setting their prisoners free. But when rumors surface of a new secret weapon in devil-ruled Cheliax, are the Stargazers willing to go up against a navy backed by Hell itself?

opens in a new windowA Voice from the Field by Neal Griffin

opens in a new windowA Voice from the Field by Neal Griffin Gunther Kane and his white supremacist group are using forced prostitution to finance the purchase of automatic weapons. Kane snatches young women off the streets and sells them to hundreds of men. When a victim is used up, she’s killed and dumped. After all, there are always more where she came from.

Physically recovered from being shot but struggling with PTSD, Tia Suarez almost doesn’t believe her eyes when she glimpses a Hispanic teenager bound and gagged in the back of Kane’s van. The look of terror on the woman’s face makes Tia desperate to rescue her.

Kane’s in the crosshairs of the FBI, who don’t want a small-town Wisconsin detective messing up their big gun bust.

NOW IN PAPERBACK:

opens in a new windowThe Eterna Files by Leanna Renee Hieber

opens in a new windowThe Eterna Files by Leanna Renee Hieber London, 1882: Queen Victoria appoints Harold Spire of the Metropolitan Police to Special Branch Division Omega. Omega is to secretly investigate paranormal and supernatural events and persons. Spire, a skeptic driven to protect the helpless and see justice done, is the perfect man to lead the department, which employs scholars and scientists, assassins and con men, and a traveling circus. Spire’s chief researcher is Rose Everhart, who believes fervently that there is more to the world than can be seen by mortal eyes.

Their first mission: find the Eterna Compound, which grants immortality. Catastrophe destroyed the hidden laboratory in New York City where Eterna was developed, but the Queen is convinced someone escaped—and has a sample of Eterna.

opens in a new windowFlash by L.E. Modesitt Jr.

opens in a new windowFlash by L.E. Modesitt Jr. Ten years ago, Jonat deVrai was a rising star in the Marines. But he shocked his superiors by walking away from the Corps after witnessing atrocity and hypocrisy. Starting his life over, he established himself as the world’s expert on the effectiveness of “prod”– product placement, the only advertising which viewers will allow through the sophisticated filters they all use against unwanted intrusions on their electronic link networks. Prod, reinforced with sublims and the “res”– resonant frequencies, a form of sonic branding — is the wave of the future. Then Jonat’s comfortable world is upset when the Centre for Societal Research approaches him to study the effects of res and prod on political campaigns. After a res-heavy political rally for Laborite Republican Senatorial candidate Juan Carlismo, armed thugs jump deVrai in a parking garage. A day later, a sniper ambushes him. What looked like a safe, lucrative contract has suddenly turned dangerous. With his life on the line, deVrai must sort flash from fact before it’s too late.

opens in a new windowMurdock’s Law and City of Widows by Loren D. Estleman

opens in a new windowMurdock's Law and City of Widows by Loren D. Estleman Two westerns in the Loren D. Estleman’s critically acclaimed Page Murdock Series, now in one volume

In Murdock’s Law, Special U.S. Deputy Page Murdock rides into Breen, Montana, on the trail of a menacing and elusive outlaw. Before he can scout the saloons for his man, he is made town marshal in a territory heating up for the ugliest range war this side of hell. The big ranchers want a gunslinger marshal, and the small ranchers have their own hired gun. But the badge on Murdock’s chest means law, and he’ll enforce it the best way he knows…with a gun.

In City of Widows, Page Murdock has been sent to the tough New Mexico of 1881 to track down a man and bring him to justice. Murdock soon finds himself on a desperate odyssey, for in the Southwest a friend can turn out to be one’s cruelest enemy and an enemy one’s finest friend.

opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly

opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly It’s 1903. Nora Kelly, twenty-four, is talented, outspoken, progressive, and climbing the ladder of opportunity, until she falls for an attractive but dangerous man who sends her running back to the Old World her family had fled. Nora takes on Paris, mixing with couturiers, artists, and “les femmes Americaines” of the Left Bank such as Gertrude Stein and Sylvia Beach. But when she stumbles into the centuries-old Collège des Irlandais, a good-looking scholar, an unconventional priest, and Ireland’s revolutionary women challenge Nora to honor her Irish blood and join the struggle to free Ireland.

opens in a new windowSeventh Son and Red Prophet by Orson Scott Card

opens in a new windowSeventh Son and Red Prophet by Orson Scott Card From Orson Scott Card, the New York Times author of Ender’s Game, comes an unforgettable story about young Alvin Maker: the seventh son of a seventh son. Born into an alternative frontier America where life is hard and folk magic is real, Alvin is gifted with the power. He must learn to use his gift wisely. But dark forces are arrayed against Alvin, and only a young girl with second sight can protect him.

opens in a new windowVoyage of the Basilisk by Marie Brennan

opens in a new windowVoyage of the Basilisk by Marie Brennan Devoted readers of Lady Trent’s earlier memoirs, A Natural History of Dragons and The Tropic of Serpents, may believe themselves already acquainted with the particulars of her historic voyage aboard the Royal Survey Ship Basilisk, but the true story of that illuminating, harrowing, and scandalous journey has never been revealed—until now.

Six years after her perilous exploits in Eriga, Isabella embarks on her most ambitious expedition yet: a two-year trip around the world to study all manner of dragons in every place they might be found. From feathered serpents sunning themselves in the ruins of a fallen civilization to the mighty sea serpents of the tropics, these creatures are a source of both endless fascination and frequent peril. Accompanying her is not only her young son, Jake, but a chivalrous foreign archaeologist whose interests converge with Isabella’s in ways both professional and personal.

opens in a new windowWhen the Heavens Fall by Marc Turner

opens in a new windowWhen the Heavens Fall by Marc Turner If you pick a fight with Shroud, Lord of the Dead, you had better ensure your victory, else death will mark only the beginning of your suffering.

A book giving its wielder power over the dead has been stolen from a fellowship of mages that has kept the powerful relic dormant for centuries. The thief, a crafty, power-hungry necromancer, intends to use the Book of Lost Souls to resurrect an ancient race and challenge Shroud for dominion of the underworld. Shroud counters by sending his most formidable servants to seize the artifact at all cost.

NEW IN MANGA:

opens in a new windowMagika Swordsman and Summoner Vol. 3 by Mitsuki Mihara; Art by MonRin

opens in a new windowMonster Monsume Vol. 8 by OKAYADO

opens in a new windowSee upcoming releases.

On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in August

opens in a new windowThe End of All Things by John Scalzi opens in a new windowChasing the Phoenix by Michael Swanwick opens in a new windowHover by Anne A. Wilson

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in August! Once a month, we’re collecting info about all of our upcoming author events. Check and see who’ll be coming to a city near you:

Mindee Arnett, opens in a new windowThe Nightmare Charade

Tuesday, August 11
opens in a new windowJoseph-Beth Booksellers
Cincinnati, OH
7:00 PM

Wednesday, August 12
opens in a new windowBooks & Co
Beavercreek, OH
7:00 PM

Carrie Bebris, opens in a new windowThe Suspicion at Sanditon

Thursday, August 6
opens in a new windowMurder by the Book
Houston, TX
6:30 PM

Saturday, August 8
opens in a new windowAnn Arbor District Library
Also with Susanna Calkins, Anna Lee Huber, and Sam Thomas, hosted by Aunt Agatha’s.
Ann Arbor, MI
2:00 PM

Monday, August 17
opens in a new windowMystery One Bookshop
Milwaukee, WI
7:00 PM

Wednesday, August 19
opens in a new windowMystery to Me Books
Madison, WI
7:00 PM

R. S. Belcher, opens in a new windowNightwise

Saturday, August 22
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Roanoke, VA
1:00 PM

W. Bruce Cameron, opens in a new windowThe Dog Master

Thursday, August 20
opens in a new windowRoscommon Area District Library
Books provided by Saturn Booksellers
Roscommon, MI
4:30 PM

Saturday, August 22
opens in a new windowHorizon Books
Traverse City, MI
10:00 AM

Cathy Clamp, opens in a new windowForbidden

Saturday, August 22
opens in a new windowHastings Entertainment
Stephenville, TX
12:00 PM

Saturday, August 29
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Harker Heights, TX
12:00 PM

Tom Doyle, opens in a new windowThe Left-Hand Way

Saturday, August 8
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Hackensack, NJ
7:00 PM

Wednesday, August 26
opens in a new windowPetworth Neighborhood Library
Washington, DC
7:00 PM

Carolyn Ives Gilman, opens in a new windowDark Orbit

Thursday, August 6
opens in a new windowPolitics and Prose
Washington, D.C.
7:00 PM

Saturday, August 8
opens in a new windowDreamhaven Books
Minneapolis, MN
2:00 PM

Neal Griffin, opens in a new windowBenefit of the Doubt

Wednesday, August 26
opens in a new windowThe Reader’s Loft
Green Bay, WI
7:00 PM

Friday, August 28
opens in a new windowMystery to Me Books
Madison, WI
7:00 PM

Del Howison and Joseph Nassise, opens in a new windowMidian Unmade

Saturday, August 1
opens in a new windowDark Delicacies
Burbank, CA
2:00 PM

Sunday, August 2
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
2:00 PM

Mary Pat Kelly, opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood

Friday, August 14
opens in a new windowBoswell Book Company
An Irish Fest Preview!
Milwaukee, WI
2:00 PM

 

Victor Milán, opens in a new windowThe Dinosaur Lords

Monday, August 3
opens in a new windowJean Cocteau Cinema
Santa Fe, NM
7:00 PM

Saturday, August 8
opens in a new windowPage One Bookstore
With Melinda Snodgrass
Albuquerque, NM
4:00 PM

Wednesday, August 12
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
With Melinda Snodgrass
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Tim Pratt, opens in a new windowPathfinder Tales: Liar’s Island

Tuesday, August 25
opens in a new windowCopperfield’s Books
In conversation with Ross Lockhart
Petaluma, CA
7:00 PM

John Scalzi, opens in a new windowThe End of All Things

Tuesday, August 11
opens in a new windowBooksellers at Laurelwood
Memphis, TN
6:30 PM

Wednesday, August 12
opens in a new windowQuail Ridge Books and Music
Raleigh, NC
7:00 PM

Thursday, August 13
opens in a new windowAvid Bookshop
Athens, GA
6:30 PM

Friday, August 14
opens in a new windowJoseph-Beth Booksellers
Lexington, KY
7:00 PM

Saturday, August 15
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Westlake, OH
2:00 PM

Sunday, August 16
opens in a new windowSchuler Books and Music
Lansing, MI
4:00 PM

Monday, August 17
opens in a new windowMadison Public Library
Books provided by opens in a new windowA Room of One’s Own
Madison, WI
7:00 PM

Tuesday, August 18
opens in a new windowPowell’s Books at Cedar Hills Crossing
Beaverton, OR
7:00 PM

Wednesday, August 19
opens in a new windowSeattle Public Library
Books provided by opens in a new windowElliott Bay Books
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM

Thursday, August 20
opens in a new windowBoise Public Library
Books provided by opens in a new windowRediscovered Books
Boise, ID
7:00 PM

Sunday, August 23
opens in a new windowMidtown Arts Center
Books provided by opens in a new windowOld Firehouse Books
Fort Collins, CO
3:00 PM

Monday, August 24
opens in a new windowBorderlands Cafe
San Francisco, CA
12:00 PM

Tuesday, August 25
opens in a new windowThe Last Bookstore
Los Angeles, CA
7:30 PM

Wednesday, August 26
opens in a new windowPoisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
7:00 PM

Melinda Snodgrass, opens in a new windowThe Edge of Dawn

Saturday, August 8
opens in a new windowPage One Bookstore
With Victor Milán
Albuquerque, NM
4:00 PM

Wednesday, August 12
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
With Victor Milán
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Michael Swanwick, opens in a new windowChasing the Phoenix

Tuesday, August 11
opens in a new windowMain Point Books
Bryn Mawr, PA
7:00 PM

Saturday, August 15
opens in a new windowQuail Ridge Books
Raleigh, NC
7:00 PM

Sunday, August 16
opens in a new windowOak City Comic Show
North Raleigh Hilton
Wake Forest Road
10:00 AM to 5:00 PM

Monday, August 17
opens in a new windowFlyleaf Books
Chapel Hill, NC
7:00 PM

Tuesday, August 18
opens in a new windowMalaprop’s Bookstore and Cafe
Asheville, NC
7:00 PM

David Thurlo, opens in a new windowLooking Through Darkness

Saturday, August 1
opens in a new windowBloomfield City Public Library
Bloomfield, NM
7:00 PM

Carrie Vaughn, opens in a new windowKitty Saves the World

Wednesday, August 5
opens in a new windowTattered Cover
East Colfax Avenue
Denver, CO
7:00 PM

Jo Walton, opens in a new windowThe Philosopher Kings

Sunday, August 9
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
3:00 PM

Monday, August 17
opens in a new windowPowell’s Books at Cedar Hills Crossing
Beaverton, OR
7:00 PM

Anne A. Wilson, opens in a new windowHover

Wednesday, August 12
opens in a new windowRJ Julia Booksellers
Madison, CT
7:00 PM

Saturday, August 15
opens in a new windowMidshipman Store
Annapolis, MD
10:00 AM

Sunday, August 16
opens in a new windowFountain Bookstore
Richmond, VA
2:00 PM

Monday, August 31
opens in a new windowWarwick’s Books
San Diego, CA
7:00 PM

Where to Find Tor at the 2015 American Library Association Conference

ALA

Tor/Forge at the 2015 American Library Association Conference

Join Tor/Forge Books at the American Library Association’s opens in a new window2015 Annual Conference in San Francisco from June 26th to June 29th. Galleys, posters, and other giveaways will be available throughout the show in the opens in a new windowTor/Forge Books booth (#1013)!

Join us for the following events:

Tor Books and the American Library Association’s Library and Information Technology Association (LITA) present
“Unknown Knowns and Known Unknowns: How Speculative Fiction Gets Technological Innovation Right and Wrong”

Add to your calendar: opens in a new windowhttps://alaac15.ala.org/node/28873
Saturday, June 27th: 1:00 PM – 2:30 PM
Moscone Center, room 2005 (W)
Science Fiction often has a predictive value, yet often overlooks the small things. Join our great panel of Science Fiction and Fantasy authors, Vernor Vinge, Greg Bear, John Scalzi, Marie Brennan and Larry Correia as they discuss their work and how it connects with technological opportunities and developments that were missed, never invented, and those that came about in ways unimagined. The panel will consider the role speculative fiction plays in fostering innovation and bringing about new ideas.
A complimentary bag of books will be given to the first 200 attendees!*

AAP’s Children’s and Teen Author Speed Dating Event
Add to your calendar: opens in a new windowhttps://alaac15.ala.org/node/29874
Saturday, June 27th: 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM
Marriott Hotel, Golden Gate B
Join authors and illustrators of children’s, middle grade, and teen fiction including Tor Teen author Kathleen Baldwin in a lightning round speed-dating event.

RUSA’s Literary Tastes Breakfast
Add to your calendar: opens in a new windowhttps://alaac15.ala.org/node/28616
Sunday, June 28th: 8:00 AM – 10:00 AM
Moscone Center, West Exhibit Hall, 1st Floor
Join Tor authors Katherine Addison and Jo Walton as they are honored for their RUSA Reading List selections. Complimentary book signing of The Goblin Emperor and My Real Children to follow.

The 2015 YALSA Alex Awards Panel
Add to your calendar: opens in a new windowhttps://alaac15.ala.org/node/28597
Sunday, June 28th: 10:30 AM – 11:30 AM
Moscone Center, room 2002 (W)
Hear from the winners of YALSA’s 2015 Alex Awards including John Scalzi. Complimentary book signing of Lock In to follow.

Mystery Panel on the Pop Top Stage
Add to your calendar: opens in a new windowhttps://alaac15.ala.org/pop-top-stage
Sunday, June 28th: 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
Moscone Center, Exhibit Hall, Pop Top Stage
Hear Forge author Rachel Howzell Hall in discussion with her fellow mystery and crime writers. Complimentary book signing of Skies of Ash to follow.

The Future According to Tor: New Titles for Young Readers and Teens
Add to your calendar: opens in a new windowhttps://alaac15.ala.org/node/30169
Sunday, June 28th: 2:30 PM – 3:30 PM
Moscone Center, Exhibit Hall, Book Buzz Theater
Senior editor Susan Chang and publishing coordinator Ali Fisher will present a selection of must-shelve forthcoming fiction from Starscape, Tor Teen, and Tor/Forge Books.

The 2015 Stonewall Book Awards Program
Add to your calendar: opens in a new windowhttps://alaac15.ala.org/node/28698
Monday, June 29th: 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Moscone Center, room 3005 (W)
Join the GLBT Round Table as it recognizes the Stonewall Book Award winners and honorees including Tor author Jo Walton. Complimentary book signing of My Real Children to follow.

The following authors will be signing complimentary copies of their books in the Tor/Forge Books booth (#1013) during the show:
Mary Pat Kelly will be signing Of Irish Blood on 6/27 at 9:00 AM.
Charlie Jane Anders will be signing galleys of All the Birds in the Sky on 6/27 at 10:00 AM.
Kathleen Baldwin will be signing A School for Unusual Girls on 6/27 at 1:30 PM.
Rachel Howzell Hall will be signing Skies of Ash on 6/28 at 10:30 AM.

On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in April


opens in a new windowNight Life by David Taylor opens in a new windowA Scourge of Vipers by Bruce DeSilva opens in a new windowScent of Murder by James O. Born

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in April! Once a month, we’re collecting info about all of our upcoming author events. Check and see who’ll be coming to a city near you:

James O. Born, opens in a new windowScent of Murder

Tuesday, April 14
opens in a new windowBooks & Books
Coral Gables, FL
6:30 PM

Wednesday, April 15
opens in a new windowThe Historical Society of Palm Beach County
Palm Beach County Courthouse
West Palm Beach, FL
7:00 PM

Saturday, April 18
opens in a new windowThe University of Central Florida Book Festival
Learn How to Write a Novel with James O. Born
Orlando, FL
10:00 AM

Wednesday, April 22
opens in a new windowVero Beach Book Center
Vero Beach, FL
6:00 PM

Thursday, April 23
opens in a new windowWest Boynton Beach Library
Boynton Beach, FL
2:00 PM

Saturday, April 25
opens in a new windowHaslam’s Bookstore
St. Petersburg, FL
3:00 PM

Bruce DeSilva, opens in a new windowA Scourge of Vipers

Thursday, April 9
opens in a new windowMysterious Bookshop
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Saturday, April 11
opens in a new windowReadmore Books
Taunton, MA
12:00 PM

Sunday, April 12
opens in a new windowProvidence Public Library
Providence, RI
2:00 PM

Thursday, April 16
opens in a new windowBook Carnival
Also with Terry Shames and Anne Cleeland
Orange, CA
7:00 PM

Saturday, April 18
opens in a new windowMurder by the Book
Houston, TX
1:00 PM

Tuesday, April 21
opens in a new windowThe Poisoned Pen
Also with Michael Robotham and Susan Cummins Miller
Scottsdale, AZ
7:00 PM

Thursday, April 23
opens in a new windowOnce Upon a Crime
Minneapolis, MN
7:00 PM

Kevin Egan, opens in a new windowThe Missing Piece

Wednesday, April 22
opens in a new windowBank Square Books
Author Luncheon
Mystic, CT
12:00 PM

James Grady, opens in a new windowLast Days of the Condor

Tuesday, April 21
opens in a new windowPen, Paper, and Palate: International Spies
A Panel with Eric Lichtblau, Scott Anderson, and Alex Berenson, moderated by Frank Delaney
The Half King
New York, NY
7:00 PM

Daryl Gregory, opens in a new windowHarrison Squared

Wednesday, April 1
opens in a new window Joseph-Beth Booksellers
Lexington, KY
7:00 PM

Thursday, April 2
opens in a new windowUnion Ave Books
Knoxville, TN
6:00 PM

Mary Pat Kelly, opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood

Saturday, April 25
opens in a new windowTitcomb’s Bookshop
East Sandwich, MA
2:00 PM

Sunday, April 26
opens in a new windowSouth Yarmouth Library
South Yarmouth, MA
2:00 PM

Jon Land, opens in a new windowBlack Scorpion

Friday, April 24
opens in a new windowBooks on the Square
Providence, RI
6:00 PM

David Taylor, opens in a new windowNight Life

Wednesday, April 15
opens in a new windowBook Soup
Hollywood, CA
7:00 PM

Saturday, April 18
opens in a new windowLos Angeles Times Festival of Books
Mysterious Galaxy In-Booth Signing
Los Angeles, CA
11:00 AM

On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events in March

opens in a new windowThe Glass Arrow by Kristen Simmons opens in a new windowOf Irish Blood by Mary Pat Kelly opens in a new windowFinn Fancy Necromancy

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in March! Once a month, we’re collecting info about all of our upcoming author events. Check and see who’ll be coming to a city near you:

Ellen Datlow, The Doll Collection

Tuesday, March 10
opens in a new windowMorbid Anatomy Museum
Books provided by WORD Bookstore.
Brooklyn, NY
7:00 PM

Monday, March 16
opens in a new windowJean Cocteau Cinema
Santa Fe, NM
6:30 PM

Saturday, March 21
opens in a new windowFunctionally Literate
Lowndes Shakespeare Center
Also with Pat Rushin and Teege Braune.
Orlando, FL
7:00 PM

James Grady, Last Days of the Condor

Wednesday, March 11
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble at The Catholic University of America
Washington, DC
6:00 PM

Randy Henderson, Finn Fancy Necromancy

Tuesday, March 3
opens in a new windowThird Place Books
Lake Forest Park, WA
7:00 PM

Thursday, March 5
opens in a new windowVillage Books
Bellingham, WA
7:00 PM

Leanna Renee Hieber, The Eterna Files

Tuesday, March 3
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
West Chester, OH
7:00 PM

Mary Pat Kelly, Of Irish Blood

Friday, March 6
opens in a new windowHackney’s On Lake
Songs and Stories with Catherine O’Connell
Glenview, IL
12:00 PM

opens in a new windowOrland Park Public Library
Irish Tales and Tunes with Catherine O’Connell
Orland Park, IL
7:00 PM

Saturday, March 7
opens in a new windowIrish American Heritage Center
Songs and Stories with Catherine O’Connell
Chicago, IL
1:00 PM

Monday, March 9
opens in a new windowEvergreen Park Public Library
Evergreen Park, IL
6:30 PM

Wednesday, March 11
opens in a new windowAnderson’s Bookshop
Naperville, IL
7:00 PM

Hank Phillippi Ryan, Truth Be Told

Thursday, March 26
opens in a new windowWest Boynton Branch Library
Boynton Beach, FL
2:00 PM

Kristen Simmons, The Glass Arrow

Saturday, March 7
opens in a new windowNoVa Teen Book Festival
Washington-Lee High School
Books provided by One More Page Books.
Arlington, VA
2:00 PM

Wednesday, March 18
opens in a new windowInkwood Books
Tampa, FL
7:00 PM

Thursday, March 26
opens in a new windowJoseph-Beth Booksellers
Crestview Hills, KY
7:00 PM

Jo Walton, The Just City

Monday, March 16
opens in a new window57th Street Books
Chicago, IL
6:30 PM

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